We've seen a lot of fun niche food businesses that get creative transforming a basic, favorite food item into a complete menu of gourmet meal options. A new restaurant takes meat loaf meals to new levels making a boring food exciting both with taste and presentation.

A sneak peek preview of Twittamentary was held at the Roger Smith Hotel last evening in
Manhattan. Hosted by the Singaporean award-winning movie producer Siok
Siok Tan, the film which is still in post-production was offered up to a
screening room full of social media types. What this filmmaker
attempted to capture on film was the randomness of an ecosystem - that
is so difficult for anyone to put their heads around - let alone
explain comprehensively in the body of one film.

It's not difficult to figure out why Facebook is deepening its ties with
a search engine like Microsoft's Bing versus Google. As indicated in
previous posts, Facebook wants to become the next Google, and has its sights set on making that happen soon. With Google stepping up their "geolocation" game,
Facebook has structured a deal with Bing where it will become the first
search engine to show US users which sites Facebook friends like.

Geolocation is at the forefront of Social Media today - and will be the
next ecosystem to scale exponentially. While Foursquare has set the
tempo, it could easily be acquired, absorbed or challenged by either of
the two major Internet players. And while Google's has had a long and
fruitful eleven year run, Facebook is proving to be a formidable
challenger as well when it comes to who will dominate the digital
landscape for the next decade.

They say that impersonation is the highest form of flattery. And while
Mark Zuckerberg may be having a hard time dealing with the "sins of his
past" exposed in the widely-popular film "The Social Network" - he should take solace in the fact that you know you've made it in life when you are satirized on Saturday Night Live. Zuckerberg has successfully gone from geek to pop-culture iconoclast.

It seems the Norwegian Nobel Committee is controversial no matter who
they select to win the Nobel Peace Prize. Last year, it was U.S.
President Barack Obama for lack of international experience and this
year it's Liu Xiaobo, an imprisoned Chinese dissident. Igniting a fury
amongst Chinese politicos, the award was criticized harshly for what the
Chinese view as a violation the Committees' core principles in honoring
"a criminal."

You know those people that you meet as you go about your day that you find yourself thinking about again? The person who helped you pick up your dropped change in the supermarket line, the gentlemen that held the coffee shop door open for you, or the person who gave you their seat on the subway? Now there's a site that allows you to do more than think about these people you connected with during chance encounters.

Conan O'Brien is returning to the airwaves via a big ostentatious orange
blimp and us Earthlings can follow its aerial whereabouts throughout
the month of October via social media. Using the creative promotion team
at Foursquare, the talk-show host has struck a deal with the
location-based social network and AT&T to promote his new show on TBS, debuting November 8 at 11PM ET/ 10 Central - in a most unique way.

In social media, sometimes its difficult to see the forest for trees.
More than often many of us (including myself) get caught up in numbers.
We replace quality with quantity because social media has this inherent
sense of puffing up one's ego based on amassing large followings. Weak
ties or connections to many is not a bad thing as long as it can be kept
in perspective.

It's been a long-standing tradition with Mark Zuckerberg and his
Facebookanistas to go into "lockdown" when he wants some serious coding
to be accomplished. The term is Zuckerberg's way of proclaiming to
developers and those outside their hallowed cubicles - "no distractions!"